A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, December 2, 2016
The Shared Practices Of Democracies

By S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole –December 1, 2016
Hon. Karu Jayasuriya our Chief Guest, Distinguished Guests: A warm
welcome to you all on behalf of the Election Commission. We are here to
celebrate 85 years of our Donoughmore Heritage. It is indeed a great
achievement. It is natural to celebrate such sturdy accomplishments; to
be proud of them.
I have just returned after attending two international meetings. Our
participation endorses and affirms our continued commitment to our
democratic traditions. First, the important meeting of the International
Foundation for Electoral Systems, or IFES, to observe the US Elections.
And second, the Commonwealth Electoral Network’s Steering Committee or
CEN meeting where Sri Lanka represents the Asian Region. I am happy to
report that we were selected to host the next of our series of CEN
Biennial Meetings. It will be held around May 2018; here in Colombo. It
was made apparent to us at the meeting that this choice recognizes the
respect we have justly earned as a democracy. Sri Lanka will chair CEN
from that meeting until the next meeting in 2020. The Commonwealth
wanted a credible voice for CEN; a respected spokesperson’s voice. Mr.
Mahinda Deshapriya’s name figured prominently in this choice. It did so
because the Commonwealth Observation Team saw first-hand the drama that
unfolded before them on that eventful night of 8 January 2015.
Enough, now, on our achievements! However good we might be, we can
always be better. Recognizing this, CEN and IFES together seek to share
our pool of best practices. Every democracy from around the globe – big
or small, strong or weak – has contributed to these best practices,
practices that we all innovate and share. This sharing helps us expand
on and reinforce our Donoughmore Heritage. I therefore wish to share
here some of the practices that others employ which we can benefit from;
practices I learnt of, practices I learnt from, on this trip. I have
chosen to elaborate on four of these that struck me as very relevant and
important to us here in Sri Lanka.
First, voter registration. We have been doing this for years in ways
similar to those of many other countries. We therefore think we have
perfected this. Annually our Grama Niladris – our Kirama Sevahars – go
house to house in the month of June and register voters. Two
deficiencies in our methods were, rather forcefully, brought to my
attention: those who turn 18 a little after June 1 will not be able to
exercise their franchise until they are really 19. Mind you, the
constitution gives each citizen the right to vote upon reaching the age
of 18.
Our Commission has been aware that we fail our youthful voters badly in
this. It has been deliberating on what we can do. The Commonwealth, on
the other hand, advocates registration, particularly as an election is
just ahead of us; not periodically at fixed times. They also suggest
that our use of public servants as temporary employees seconded to the
Commission for this exercise, makes our voter rolls questionable. They
say the loyalty of public servants may lean towards the party in power.
That opens to question the credibility of our voter rolls. They suggest
using people from the private sector as well. We must certainly think
about this.
Second: The US Elections saw 30% of the electorate voting well before
polling day; which technically is only the last polling day. To preserve
the secrecy of the ballot, two envelopes are used. An outer envelope
verifies the validity of the voter’s registration. Inside that envelope
is a secrecy envelop containing the actual, marked ballot. It has no
marking. It is pooled with all others and opened at the time of
counting. Is this not the means to three useful things? – a) avoiding
long lines at the polls that discourage voter participation, b)
increasing through enhanced convenience, the participation of emergency
workers and people who must travel long distances on polling day and
therefore cannot vote; and c) restoring the right to vote of our
Diaspora. After all, the Diaspora are guaranteed the right to vote as
citizens in our constitution. But we deny them that right. They bring in
valuable foreign exchange. We cannot – we must not – fail them.